http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Randy_Rhoads
Excerpts:
1) Randall William Rhoads (December 6, 1956 – March 19, 1982) (Randall was born
on my mother's b'day and died on mine) ...cal
2)Rhoads was killed instantly, as were Aycock (36) and Youngblood (58). All
three bodies were burned beyond recognition, and were identified by dental
records and Rhoads' jewelry.
http://www.datehookup.com/Thread-526690.htm
Excerpt:
Take a guess where, AFTER 25 yrs of research, WHERE they have decided the best
place to PUT the veri-chip(digital angel) implant in the human body???
"where a human has the least amount of accessible skin. Either the forehead or
top of the hand".
http://radioalice.radio.com/2012/01/30/fran-drescher-was-abducted-by-aliens/
Excerpt:
Her story adds up! Gotta be true… except for the slight fact that ex-husband
Peter Marc Jacobson doesn't seem to remember the extraterrestrial meet-and-greet
at all! Could it be that his memory was altered to think their hands were
scarred by matching freak drill bit accidents? Fran seems to think so.
"I said to him, that's what the aliens programmed us to think," Fran explains.
"But really, that's where the chip is."
http://www.straightdope.com/columns/read/1450/how-can-they-identify-people-from-\
their-dental-records
Excerpt:
http://www.ehow.com/about_5435995_microchip-implants-humans.html
Excerpt:
GPS Capabilities
According to a press release by VeriChip, the corporation distributes a product
called VeriTrace in response to the events of Hurricane Katrina. Basically, it
implements GPS tracking capabilities, giving authorities the ability to track
down missing people during disasters, among other things.
Choice or Not
Since the inception of the chip, it remained a choice for you if you wanted the
chip implanted or not. In response to the question of choice, some states have
enacted Senate Bill 362 in 2007, which makes it illegal to force microchip
implantation on any human being. The government also speaks out for privacy.
http://www.rfidjournal.com/article/view/3729
Excerpt:
VeriChip's VeriTrace Platform Sees Sales Boost
The system, which employs implantable tags to identify and track the remains of
deceased individuals, is seeing gains in sales as states acquire it for disaster
preparedness.
By Mary Catherine O'Connor
Nov. 5, 2007—In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina—which devastated much of the
north-central Gulf Coast in 2005—Gary Hargrove, the coroner of Harrison County
in southern Mississippi, used RFID tags to track human bones unearthed after the
flooding. Marc Poulshock, VP of implantable and emergency management divisions
for RFID solutions provider VeriChip, says Hargrove duct-taped a tag to each
bone. According to Poulshock, Hargrove utilized VeriChip's VeriTrace platform,
designed to help identify and track the remains of deceased
individuals—particularly during large-scale disasters with hundreds or thousands
of fatalities.
VeriChip is better known for its VeriMed product, in which embedded tags are
used to retrieve a living person's medical history. In its third-quarter
financial results, VeriChip reported that its implantable segment, which
includes VeriMed and VeriTrace, generated $53,000, primarily through sales of
its VeriTrace products. (VeriChip also sells RFID patient-tracking systems for
health-care facilities that do not use implantable tags.)
VeriChip's VeriTrace microchip, which is implanted in the remains of deceased
individuals.
This is the first revenue posted by the division since its initial public
offering, announced in February, and beats the company's earlier projections
that it would not generate revenue until next year. (The company used to market
its implantable tags as part of an access-control system called VeriGuard, but
has since discontinued that product, choosing instead to focus only on
health-care and forensic applications, according to Allison Tomek, VeriChip's VP
of investor relations and corporate communications.)
http://www.lambslain.com/2010/08/positiveids-implantable-microchip.html
Excerpt:
In 2005, in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, VeriChip Corp. donated implantable
chips to the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which used them to track and
identify corpses in Mississippi and Louisiana.
http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/ngm/0410/feature5/index.html
Excerpt:
When did this calamity happen? It hasn't—yet. But the doomsday scenario is not
far-fetched. The Federal Emergency Management Agency lists a hurricane strike on
New Orleans as one of the most dire threats to the nation, up there with a large
earthquake in California or a terrorist attack on New York City. Even the Red
Cross no longer opens hurricane shelters in the city, claiming the risk to its
workers is too great.
No comments:
Post a Comment